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> Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

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Snickerdog
#1 2022-11-30 00:31:34

Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

snicker

Under pressure from President Biden, Speaker Pelosi said that House lawmakers will take up legislation on Wednesday to stop a nationwide strike by railroad workers by imposing a proposed contract that members at four railroad unions had rejected, saying Congress needs to intervene to prevent devastating job losses.

“I don’t like going against the ability of unions to strike, but weighing the equities, we must avoid a strike. Jobs will be lost, even union jobs will be lost, water will not be safe, product will not be going to market,” she said.



Both sides in the negotiations had agreed to a cooling-off period until Dec. 9 with the sticking points involving work schedules and paid sick time.



As The Wall Street Journal reports, under the Railway Labor Act, Congress can make both sides accept an agreement that their members have voted down.

As you would expect some Democrats are hesitant to bite the hand that feeds them and tell labor unions what to do; and some union leaders have already expressed their ire at the intervention.

“We’ve made it clear we wanted this process to play out, and we even asked Congress not to intervene in this process because by doing that, it takes away any leverage we have with the industry,” said Michael Baldwin, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen.

Michael Paul Lindsey, a locomotive engineer in Idaho and steering committee member for Railroad Workers United, told Insider it was a "blatant betrayal," but he wasn't surprised.

"I thought it was kind of laughable that anyone would think that either the Democrats or the Republicans actually cared. Bottom line, they care about money," he said.

Even so, "there was always that hope in the back of my mind that maybe someone would do something that was actually right for the American worker for once — instead of just what's right for corporate America."

Republicans have traditionally philosophically-opposed government intervention into private contractual obligations, and Senator Marco Rubio has vociferously defended the workers' rights:

“Just because Congress has the authority to impose a heavy-handed solution does not mean we should,” he said.

“It is wrong for the Biden administration, which has failed to fight for workers, to ask Congress to impose a deal the workers themselves have rejected.”



We will see tomorrow if Pelosi really does have the votes she claims to pass this bill.

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#2 2022-11-30 23:32:18

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

Ole working class Joe wants them to work 12 hour shifts with no vacation or sick days  lol

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Phillip_McCavity
#3 2022-11-30 23:34:22

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

They are getting a huge raise and one more personal day.

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#4 2022-11-30 23:43:04

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

wrote:

Ole working class Joe wants them to work 12 hour shifts with no vacation or sick days  lol

Just like I did! Yes siree.
                                   \
xidentrucker.jpg

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VP_Spiro_T_Cheney
#5 2022-12-01 01:44:03

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

The election is OVER, Folks!  Massive red wave, Lake elected, Trump back in office, all MAGA candidates win!!!
\
insanerepuke

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Snickerdog
#6 2022-12-01 01:50:10

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

VP_Spiro_T_Cheney wrote:

The election is OVER, Folks!  Massive red wave, Lake elected, Trump back in office, all MAGA candidates win!!!
\
insanerepuke

Yeah and now Pelosi and Biden say FUQ THE UNIONS and will pass a law forbidding a strike and they get no sick time

snicker

When will they learn?

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#7 2022-12-01 01:58:18

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

Well the union bosses will get big payouts for selling out their members, and in the era of unbridled corruption, greed and graft that's all that matters.

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Snickerdog
#8 2022-12-01 02:08:16

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

wrote:

Well the union bosses will get big payouts for selling out their members, and in the era of unbridled corruption, greed and graft that's all that matters.

And 10% for the big people who got it done!
\
bidenhands pelosi

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RockHardConservative
#9 2022-12-01 02:36:15

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

Joe Biden says HELL NO to rail worker sick days!

Fuq them!
\
bidenhands

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Snickerdog
#10 2022-12-01 13:50:31

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

Nearly 115,000 railroaders were closely following two votes Wednesday in the U.S. House of Representatives after President Joe Biden called on Congress to immediately pass legislation to avert a rail strike.

The House voted 290-137 Wednesday to avert a possible rail strike amid debate over the national tentative agreement brokered by the White House between union employees and Class I railroads in September.

Railroad workers for the 12 freight unions have been operating without a new contract for over three years.

However, strict attendance policies and the lack of paid sick days have been sticking points among the nearly 60,000 members of four freight rail unions that voted to reject the national contract in mid-November.

“It’s been a long three years, depending on how you look at it,” Jeremy Ferguson, president of the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers (SMART-TD), told FreightWaves. “The workforce is cut back to the bone, and those that are left are having to pick up the slack.”

Separately Wednesday, the House passed legislation by a vote of 221-207 to add seven days of paid sick leave to the tentative rail agreement. Both pieces of legislation aimed to stop a rail strike now head to the Senate.


This is good news for railroaders FreightWaves spoke to for this article. None wanted to go on strike but said they wanted the rail carriers and shippers “to put employees over record profits” and address some of the major challenges, including the attendance policy and lack of paid sick leave, that have resulted in a mass exodus among railroad employees.

Railroaders say morale, quality of life at all-time low
One locomotive engineer says morale is at an all-time low at the Class I railroad where he’s worked for more than 25 years. He’s seen engineers with 15 or 20 years “tie up for the last time” and quit.

He’s among nearly 24,000 locomotive engineers and trainmen who make up the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET). BLET was among eight freight unions that voted in mid-November to accept the national tentative agreement reached between the unions and railroads in September.

BLET, the second-largest rail union, voted 53.5% in favor of ratifying the national agreement, while 46.5% of its membership voted against it.

While the engineer, who didn’t want to be named in the article for fear of retaliation, wouldn’t say how he voted earlier this month, he understands why four of the 12 freight unions, including SMART-TD, the largest union, rejected the agreement.

“I know some of the younger engineers voted for the agreement so they can receive their back pay because they plan to quit because they don’t have the seniority that I do,” he said. “I don’t blame them — they want jobs where they are home more, can attend their kids’ events, and some are trying to save their marriages after being on call 24/7 for the past few years.”

He said there used to be several road engineers at any given time who were marked up as available to work once his shift ended. That’s not the case now, he said, as some have quit, were fired or took other jobs.

“Now, sometimes I get off the train after being gone on the road for a few days, drive an hour to my house, sleep for 10 hours, then I’m being woken up by a crew dispatcher to report for work in two hours,” the engineer said. “It’s not much of a life for road engineers and conductors anymore.”

He and his conductor both contracted COVID in 2020 at a time when all of the Class I railroads had slashed their workforces because of precision scheduled railroading (PSR) running longer trains with fewer employees. Around the same time, the rail carriers had made major cuts to middle management and ground employees, forcing him and others “to do more with less.”

Unable to work for three days because of COVID, he received a call from his dispatcher threatening disciplinary action if he did not return to work.

His railroad does offer short-term disability that pays him 65% of his hourly rate after seven days of unpaid leave, but he couldn’t afford to stay home. The engineer said he also faced immense pressure from his bosses to return before he was well. Prior to the COVID-19 vaccine being available, he said engineers and conductors continued to pass the potentially deadly virus around to keep up with the freight volume.

“I had friends that I worked with for 20 years who died of COVID, but we couldn’t even go to their funerals without facing scrutiny by management,” the engineer said. “We had no choice but to work.”

Ferguson said his membership wants changes to the railroad carriers’ emphasis on PSR and building massive trains.

“One of the biggest issues that we’ve had in the past year with precision scheduled railroading was trying to cut the workforce and then the attendance policies being ratcheted up to a level that we’ve never seen before. … Before, some people were allowed five to six days off a month [but] now are down to one day a month and no family time,” Ferguson said.

A Class I railroad conductor with more than 25 years of experience said he’s never worked at a job that spends so much money to train employees, only to spend double that amount to find something to fire them for once they are considered trained and marked up to work.

“There’s this rush to get everybody trained but management isn’t focused on teaching or ‘on-the-job training’ once they mark up at our railroad,” the conductor told FreightWaves. “In the early days when I was starting out, I had a mentor who had been with the railroad a long time that would pull me aside and explain to me what I did wrong. There’s a learning curve to working on the railroad. Sure, I would get ribbed by the old-timers for a while, but they helped me.”

The biggest lesson he learned was to buy insurance from a few companies that specialize in the rail industry.

“I explain it to new hires that it’s like ballerinas who have insurance on their legs and/or feet because that’s how they make a living,” the conductor said. “Buying job insurance is a product of the way they treat people on the railroad; we have to do this.”

A locomotive engineer for another railroad agreed.

“The railroad wants to fire you at every turn — that’s why almost every single one of us carries job insurance,” the engineer said. “I don’t know that there’s too many other industries on the planet that carries insurance to protect our jobs.”

A member of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes Division (BMWED), who also declined to have his name published for fear of being targeted, said he was among 56% of the rank and file who rejected the tentative national agreement in October.

The BMWED has nearly 26,000 workers who build and maintain the tracks and bridges on railroads across the nation.

He voted against the contract over the Class I railroads’ refusal to provide paid sick leave for railroad workers. He said he was told by railroad management that his union contract provided him with ample weeks of vacation time to go to the doctor if needed. The maintenance-of-way employee said that even though he ranks relatively high in seniority and is among the first to pick his weeks of vacation for the next year, there’s no way he could predict when he needs to go to the doctor or use a day to stay home with a sick child.

“My wife is my hero,” the employee said. “She has a demanding job, too, but she never uses her sick days for herself; it’s always for the kids because I can’t do it without repercussions. It’s been a huge strain on our marriage.”

He said most railroaders hope to avert a strike, which could result in economic losses of $2 billion per day. He said he and approximately 115,000 railroaders would be without paychecks right before Christmas.

“I’ve been called selfish and greedy because no paid sick time by the railroads is a deal-breaker for me, but the office employees at these railroads automatically get 80 hours of sick time,” the worker told FreightWaves.

“We worked through a pandemic and didn’t have the option of working from home or shelter in place like the office personnel,” he said. “The railroad told us how proud they were and thanked us for being essential workers. When you offer some employees paid sick time and tell them to stay safe, but then management tells us to get back on the road because there are not enough workers, it sends a message that we aren’t important and we are only essential to their bottom lines.”

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Phililp McCavity
#11 2022-12-01 15:02:07

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

They are already way overpaid and extremely entitled.  Not to mention that way too many of them are white.

I still say that Biden needs to fire every one of them and replace them with hard-working undocumented immigrants.  It's the perfect solution, they will never complain about the job for fear of being deported and we will never have to worry about not getting our shyt from Amazon on time.

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#12 2022-12-01 15:07:22

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

Once they burn these guys out they will have to use illegals but will they do the 24/7 aand 12 hour shift thing?

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Phililp McCavity
#13 2022-12-01 15:10:20

Re: Unions Furious As Biden, Pelosi Push Bill To Avert Rail Strike - The Election is OVER, Folks!

wrote:

Once they burn these guys out they will have to use illegals but will they do the 24/7 aand 12 hour shift thing?

That's the best part - if they refuse or quit there's an endless supply of them, so it doesn't matter.

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